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This report posts during the first summer after taking mid-winter occupancy.
UNIQUE FEATURES - OVERVIEW
Project located in Collinsville, IL on a south-facing slope nestled in the Mississippi River bluffs opposite St Louis, MO
Grid-tied and nearly breaking even with the utility company
Entirely passive solar; no conventional HVAC
Sustainability-centric from preliminary sketches to occupancy
ADA compliant
(The following outline sometimes dwells on these “unique
features” but, for most part, they are woven into the larger narrative.
EXTERIOR
FEATURES
House
Rectangular-shaped house with
its long profile facing “solar” south but canted slightly westward to catch
more afternoon winter sunshine
Square and rectangular
configurations are the most energy efficient because they minimize exterior
wall surface,
They also require fewer
building materials and therefore minimize embodied energy for manufacturing and
shipping of materials; fewer materials also lowers construction costs
Of note: the amount of earth sheltering, the conduits for the AGS system and the PV array (click on picture to enlarge it) |
Exterior walls supported by custom trusses built from lumber salvaged from tear-downs; roof/ceiling supported by "store-bought" trusses
House insulation: 15" thick (R-45) in exterior walls, 18" thick (R-54) in cathedral ceilings
The joints between individual roof and wall sheathing panels and joints between roof and walls are taped to eliminate air infiltration; all sheathing is plywood rather than OSB (both products may utilize resins containing formaldehyde but plywood has less)
All windows (except one
small east window) face south which maximizes winter solar gain; having none facing
north or west precludes penetration of north and west winds in winter and unwanted morning and afternoon sunshine in summer
Windows all have overhangs
sized to minimize solar gain during warm months while allowing maximum gain
during cool months; mid-summer shading by the overhangs for both stories is apparent in the picture above, so much so in fact that the exterior wall looks bluish instead of white
Front entrance and garage
doors are shielded by the house from winter winds
Screened porch (yet to be finished) is extra tall
for better ventilation; Energy Star ceiling fan; 3' wide soffits (eves) for
more shade and better rain diversion
Light-colored steel siding, roofing and soffits
Steel has at least a 60-year
life expectancy under normal circumstances; more hail resistant than
petroleum-based siding and roofing
100% recyclable end-life
Smooth, white siding is highly reflective, thus minimizing heat gain during warm months; light gray roof only slightly less reflective than the white walls
Cool roof design: A 3½” space exists between the first layer of sheathing (that which lies above the insulation) and a second layer of sheathing (to which the metal roofing attaches) that creates a “mini-attic” through which air passively flows from the soffit vents upward to ridge vents, keeping the roof cooler in summer
Rain
Handler system replaces conventional gutters except over traffic
areas; converts sheet water from the roof back into raindrops that nourish
nearby native vegetation without causing soil erosion
Grounds
Four rain gardens slow runoff
and keep it on site until it can soak down to the water table and leave in a
purified state as opposed to running on grade and carrying noxious contaminants
(from air pollution and from herbicides, pesticides or fertilizers) to neighbors’ or
public property and, in our case, to the lake across the street
Rain gardens as well as
other landscaping are or will be populated by native plants which require no
energy-dense artificial fertilizers or soil amendments and, after the first
growing season, require no watering
Shelter belt of native
eastern red cedars shielding house from winter winds planted years ago as
bare-rooted seedlings; cedars also provide excellent habitat for wildlife – four-legged,
flying and creepy-crawling
Photovoltaic array sized to
break even with the utility company (“reverse metering”); energy cost limited
to natural gas for water heating, clothes drying and cooking
Annualized
Geo-Solar System (AGS)
AGS utilizes the energy from
the summer
sun, supplemented by sunshine through the windows in winter
to condition the house year-round in the absence of conventional HVAC
AGS comprises three
components
Solar collector (fenced-in depressed area in front of the house) to harvest heat from the sun during warm months
Conduits (4”
pipes) slanting upward from the collector to a solar chimney behind the
house distributing heat from the solar collector to the earth under and behind
the house; design still in flux at the time of this writing -- (see second thoughts on solar collection design)
Insulation/watershed
umbrella that extends outward from the house below grade +/-20’
in all directions, hence enlarging the amount of dry and insulated thermal mass
available for heat storage beyond just that below the floor
Umbrella lays 12" - 30" below grade and consists of several
layers of 6 mil plastic sheeting and a layer of foam board insulation overlaid
by a physical barrier of recycled carpet
Heat during cool months
comes from that stored in the thermal mass during the summer moving passively into
the living space (heat seeks cold); additional heat comes from sunshine through
the south-facing windows during winter; conventional heating is unnecessary
During warm months, the heat lost from the thermal mass during the winter is replenished by (a) heat from the AGS solar collector and (b) by heat absorbed into the thermal mass from the living space; conventional AC is unnecessary
Target temperatures for the
living space toggle between lower-to-mid-70s (winter) to high 70s - lower 80s (summer), although a good guess is that it will take the heat from at least
two summer seasons to overcome the ancient cold exposed by excavation into the
hillside (at our latitude, the legacy year-round soil temperature at the depth
of 10 ft is 60 degrees)
The house floor (concrete) temperature
on our early March move-in day was 60 degrees measured at the base of the
concrete north wall; it had risen slowly to 79 degrees by the time of this
writing in mid-summer
(The comfort level in an earth sheltered dwelling is a function of a phenomenon called Mean Radiant Temperature. For an understanding of this important concept, click on the first post at the top of the left column under the heading “Understanding Our Project")
UTILITARIAN SPACES
Garage
and Airlock
Garage has super-insulated
walls and ceiling; the floor is insulated by the underlying
insulation/watershed umbrella; the temperature in the garage was 80 degrees at the time of this writing, up from the upper 60s during the winter
Small area of garage wall is
intentionally left uninsulated to create a storage area for fruits and vegetables
during cold months (a mini-iteration of the old fashion root cellar)
Wall cabinets in the garage are a Facebook Marketplace finds
The main door of the house
leads to a circumscribed space called the “airlock”, essentially a
semi-conditioned breezeway that modulates outside air rushing in when the front
door is opened – warming it in winter and cooling it in summer – before the
outside air can follow into the living space through a secondary door
All four doors leading in and out of the airlock are self-closing so as not to be left open unintentionally
Vertical
Basement
The back (north) concrete wall, 60’ long and 12’ tall, by conducting heat in and out of the soil behind it, is critical for conditioning the house
The distance between the concrete wall and the stick-built wall separating the basement from the living quarters is 5' which provides space for storage shelves 2' deep leaving 3' for wheelchair accessibility
The insulation/watershed
umbrella at the top of the wall shields the soil under it from surface water
penetration while the insulation traps and holds heat
All but the top foot or so of the
wall is backed by the soil under the insulation/watershed umbrella
that will gradually become drier and, instead of its legacy temperature of 60
degrees, will maintain temperatures in the 70s
Lack of insulation on either
side of the wall under the umbrella allows heat to pass freely through the wall – from
the thermal mass inward during cool months and outward into the thermal mass during
warm months
The continuous row of vents near the top and bottom of the tall stick-built wall (that divides the vertical basement from the living space) are critical for allowing room air to reach the wall
During warm months, three box fans equidistantly suspended from the ceiling and directed downward can be used to transfer heat to the concrete wall by pulling (warm) air through the top vents and pushing it downward past the concrete wall and out through the bottom vents
Combination GFCI / AFCI
circuit breakers in the service panel eliminate the need for individual GFCI /
AFCI receptacles at the point of use in the living space
Free-standing (not attached
to a conventional HVAC unit) Energy Recovery Ventilator supplies fresh, temperature-and-humidity-moderated
outside air without which our airtight house would soon fill with stale and unhealthy air
Home run (as opposed to
branching) water supply system using PEX (polyethylene) tubing and a central
manifold; the PEX lies below the floor and was shielded from damage while
pouring the concrete by running it inside of 1 ½” PVC piping; the PVC also
makes it possible to use an original PEX line to pull a replacement line in the
unlikely case of a water leak; PEX for supply lines is "greener" than copper lines initially and because it has an indefinite life span
Energy Star tankless
(“on-demand”) water heater that heats water once as it is used; more energy efficient than tank types that heat the same water over and over,
especially during periods of low or no usage
“Water Cop” system to prevent flooding in the living spaces due to plumbing failures
___________________
The next post covers the living areas of the house.
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